Here's one you don't see every day. Delta Airlines passed out napkins for people to flirt with strangers on a plane. It says, "Because you're on a plane full of interesting people and hey...you never know," and then on the back is a place for your name and cell phone number so you can, well, start dating. One napkin says, "Write down your number and give it to your plane crush." Not everyone thought it was a good idea and called it "creepy" and social media had a field day. Coke and Delta both apologized for the napkins, but chances are good they knew what they were doing all along. But the napkins are gone.

Coke's taking a hard look at bringing cannabis-infused drinks to the market. It was leaked this week that Coca-Cola is in talks with a Canadian cannabis company to infuse drinks with CBD, cannabidiol, which is considered a health additive, but without the ingredient that will get you stoned. Coke calls it "non-psychoactive CBD," which has anti-inflammatory uses and is legal in the US. But it’s still an extraction from either marijuana or hemp which both remain illegal at the federal level.

Coke is testing the waters. People want CBD, so Coca-Cola just might give it to them.

Smirnoff. Jack Daniels. Coca-Cola??? Well, maybe. Coca-Cola has launched its first three alcohol drinks, calling them lemon flavored "alcopops," with alcohol content ranging from 3% to 8%. This could be big, very big, if Coke puts its brand and marketing juggernaut behind alcopops. Right now, the drinks are being rolled out only in Japan, but the world is waiting. This is the first alcoholic drink in the 125-year history of Coca-Cola. Alcopops boomed in Europe and the UK with Smirnoff Ice and Bacardi Breezer, so Coke has been watching. These drinks are controversial because they are like alcoholic soft drinks and attract young people. But Coke's move is a toe in the water, to see if a gigantic new market might open up.